33,231 research outputs found
An IRAS High Resolution Image Restoration (HIRES) Atlas of All Interacting Galaxies in the IRAS Revised Bright Galaxy Sample
We present high-resolution (30"-1') 12, 25, 60, and 100 micron images of 106
interacting galaxy systems contained in the IRAS Revised Bright Galaxy Sample
(RBGS, Sanders et al. 2003), a complete sample of all galaxies having a 60
micron flux density greater than 5.24 Jy. These systems were selected to have
at least two distinguishable galaxies separated by less than three average
galactic diameters, and thus we have excluded very widely separated systems and
very advanced mergers. The new complete survey has the same properties as the
prototype survey of Surace et al. 1993. We find no increased tendency for
infrared-bright galaxies to be associated with other infrared bright galaxies
among the widely separated pairs studied here. We find small enhancements in
far-infrared activity in multiple galaxy systems relative to RBGS
non-interacting galaxies with the same blue luminosity distribution. We also
find no differences in infrared activity (as measured by infrared color and
luminosity) between late and early-type spiral galaxies.Comment: 49 pages, 13 figures. To appear in the Astronomical Journal. Figures
have been degraded due to space considerations. A PDF version with higher
quality figures is available at
http://humu.ipac.caltech.edu/~jason/pubs/surace_hires.pd
Major Galaxy Mergers and the Growth of Supermassive Black Holes in Quasars
Despite observed strong correlations between central supermassive black holes
(SMBHs) and star-formation in galactic nuclei, uncertainties exist in our
understanding of their coupling. We present observations of the ratio of
heavily-obscured to unobscured quasars as a function of cosmic epoch up to z~3,
and show that a simple physical model describing mergers of massive, gas-rich
galaxies matches these observations. In the context of this model, every
obscured and unobscured quasar represent two distinct phases that result from a
massive galaxy merger event. Much of the mass growth of the SMBH occurs during
the heavily-obscured phase. These observations provide additional evidence for
a causal link between gas-rich galaxy mergers, accretion onto the nuclear SMBH
and coeval star formation.Comment: Accepted for publication in Science. Published by Science Express on
March 25th. 17 pages, 5 figures, including supplemental online materia
New Results from a Near-Infrared Search for Hidden Broad-Line Regions in Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies
This paper reports the latest results from a near-infrared search for hidden
broad-line regions (BLRs: FWHM >~ 2,000 km/s) in ultraluminous infrared
galaxies (ULIGs). The new sample contains thirty-nine ULIGs from the 1-Jy
sample selected for their lack of BLRs at optical wavelengths. The results from
this new study are combined with those from our previous optical and
near-infrared surveys to derive the fraction of all ULIGs with optical or
near-infrared signs of genuine AGN activity (either a BLR or [Si VI] emission).
Comparisons of the dereddened emission-line luminosities of the optical or
obscured BLRs detected in the ULIGs of the 1-Jy sample with those of optical
quasars indicate that the obscured AGN/quasar in ULIGs is the main source of
energy in at least 15 -- 25% of all ULIGs in the 1-Jy sample. This fraction is
30 -- 50% among ULIGs with L_ir > 10^{12.3} L_sun. These results are compatible
with those from recent mid-infrared spectroscopic surveys carried out with ISO.
(abridged)Comment: 40 pages including 10 figures and 3 tables (Table 3 should be printed
in landscape mode
Phylogenetic and functional analysis of the Cation Diffusion Facilitator (CDF) family: improved signature and prediction of substrate specificity
BACKGROUND The Cation Diffusion Facilitator (CDF) family is a ubiquitous family of heavy metal transporters. Much interest in this family has focused on implications for human health and bioremediation. In this work a broad phylogenetic study has been undertaken which, considered in the context of the functional characteristics of some fully characterised CDF transporters, has aimed at identifying molecular determinants of substrate selectivity and at suggesting metal specificity for newly identified CDF transporters. RESULTS Representative CDF members from all three kingdoms of life (Archaea, Eubacteria, Eukaryotes) were retrieved from genomic databases. Protein sequence alignment has allowed detection of a modified signature that can be used to identify new hypothetical CDF members. Phylogenetic reconstruction has classified the majority of CDF family members into three groups, each containing characterised members that share the same specificity towards the principally-transported metal, i.e. Zn, Fe/Zn or Mn. The metal selectivity of newly identified CDF transporters can be inferred by their position in one of these groups. The function of some conserved amino acids was assessed by site-directed mutagenesis in the poplar Zn2+ transporter PtdMTP1 and compared with similar experiments performed in prokaryotic members. An essential structural role can be assigned to a widely conserved glycine residue, while aspartate and histidine residues, highly conserved in putative transmembrane domains, might be involved in metal transport. The potential role of group-conserved amino acid residues in metal specificity is discussed. CONCLUSION In the present study phylogenetic and functional analyses have allowed the identification of three major substrate-specific CDF groups. The metal selectivity of newly identified CDF transporters can be inferred by their position in one of these groups. The modified signature sequence proposed in this work can be used to identify new hypothetical CDF members
Optimal states and almost optimal adaptive measurements for quantum interferometry
We derive the optimal N-photon two-mode input state for obtaining an estimate
\phi of the phase difference between two arms of an interferometer. For an
optimal measurement [B. C. Sanders and G. J. Milburn, Phys. Rev. Lett. 75, 2944
(1995)], it yields a variance (\Delta \phi)^2 \simeq \pi^2/N^2, compared to
O(N^{-1}) or O(N^{-1/2}) for states considered by previous authors. Such a
measurement cannot be realized by counting photons in the interferometer
outputs. However, we introduce an adaptive measurement scheme that can be thus
realized, and show that it yields a variance in \phi very close to that from an
optimal measurement.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, journal versio
Early life growth patterns persist for 12 years and impact pulmonary outcomes in cystic fibrosis
BACKGROUND:
In children with cystic fibrosis (CF), recovery from growth faltering within 2 years of diagnosis (Responders) is associated with better growth and less lung disease at age 6 years. This study examined whether these benefits are sustained through 12 years of age.
METHODS:
Longitudinal growth from 76 children with CF enrolled in the Wisconsin CF Neonatal Screening Project was examined and categorized into 5 groups: R12, R6, and R2, representing Responders who maintained growth improvement to age 12, 6, and 2 years, respectively, and I6 and N6, representing Non-responders whose growth did and did not improve during ages 2-6 years, respectively. Lung disease was evaluated by % predicted forced expiratory volume in one second (FEV1) and chest radiograph (CXR) scores.
RESULTS:
Sixty-two percent were Responders. Within this group, 47% were R12, 28% were R6, and 25% were R2. Among Non-responders, 76% were N6. CF children with meconium ileus (MI) had worse lung function and CXR scores compared to other CF children. Among 53 children with pancreatic insufficiency without MI, R12 had significantly better FEV1 (97-99% predicted) and CXR scores during ages 6-12 years than N6 (89-93% predicted). Both R6 and R2 experienced a decline in FEV1 by ages 10-12 years.
CONCLUSIONS:
Early growth recovery in CF is critical, as malnutrition during infancy tends to persist and catch-up growth after age 2 years is difficult. The longer adequate growth was maintained after early growth recovery, the better the pulmonary outcomes at age 12 years
Representations of the Weyl group and Wigner functions for SU(3)
Bases for SU(3) irreps are constructed on a space of three-particle tensor
products of two-dimensional harmonic oscillator wave functions. The Weyl group
is represented as the symmetric group of permutations of the particle
coordinates of these space. Wigner functions for SU(3) are expressed as
products of SU(2) Wigner functions and matrix elements of Weyl transformations.
The constructions make explicit use of dual reductive pairs which are shown to
be particularly relevant to problems in optics and quantum interferometry.Comment: : RevTex file, 11 pages with 2 figure
Nonclassical Fields and the Nonlinear Interferometer
We demonstrate several new results for the nonlinear interferometer, which
emerge from a formalism which describes in an elegant way the output field of
the nonlinear interferometer as two-mode entangled coherent states. We clarify
the relationship between squeezing and entangled coherent states, since a weak
nonlinear evolution produces a squeezed output, while a strong nonlinear
evolution produces a two-mode, two-state entangled coherent state. In between
these two extremes exist superpositions of two-mode coherent states manifesting
varying degrees of entanglement for arbitrary values of the nonlinearity. The
cardinality of the basis set of the entangled coherent states is finite when
the ratio is rational, where is the nonlinear strength. We
also show that entangled coherent states can be produced from product coherent
states via a nonlinear medium without the need for the interferometric
configuration. This provides an important experimental simplification in the
process of creating entangled coherent states.Comment: 21 pages, 2 figure
Outflows in Infrared-Luminous Starbursts at z < 0.5. I. Sample, NaI D Spectra, and Profile Fitting
We have conducted a spectroscopic survey of 78 starbursting infrared-luminous
galaxies at redshifts up to z = 0.5. We use moderate-resolution spectroscopy of
the NaI D interstellar absorption feature to directly probe the neutral phase
of outflowing gas in these galaxies. Over half of our sample are ultraluminous
infrared galaxies that are classified as starbursts; the rest have infrared
luminosities in the range log(L_IR/L_sun) = 10.2 - 12.0. The sample selection,
observations, and data reduction are described here. The absorption-line
spectra of each galaxy are presented. We also discuss the theory behind
absorption-line fitting in the case of a partially-covered, blended absorption
doublet observed at moderate-to-high resolution, a topic neglected in the
literature. A detailed analysis of these data is presented in a companion
paper.Comment: 59 pages, 18 figures in AASTeX preprint style; to appear in September
issue of ApJ
Keck Absorption-Line Spectroscopy of Galactic Winds in Ultraluminous Infrared Galaxies
In this paper, we present moderately-high resolution (~65 km/s) spectroscopy,
acquired with ESI on Keck II, of 11 ultraluminous infrared galaxies at z < 0.3
from the IRAS 1 Jy sample. The targets were chosen as good candidates to host
galaxy-scale outflows, and most have infrared luminosities dominated by star
formation. We use a chi-squared minimization to fit one- to three-component
profiles to the NaI D interstellar absorption doublet in each object. Assuming
that gas blueshifted by more than 70 km/s relative to the systemic velocity of
the host is outflowing, we detect outflows in 73% of these objects. We adopt a
simple model of a mass-conserving free wind to infer mass outflow rates in the
range (dM/dt)_tot(H) = 13-133 M_sun/yr for galaxies hosting a wind. These
values of (dM/dt)_tot, normalized to the corresponding global star formation
rates inferred from infrared luminosities, are in the range eta = (dM/dt)_tot /
SFR = 0.1-0.7. This is on average a factor of only 10 less than eta from recent
measurements of nearby dwarfs, edge-on spirals, and lower-luminosity infrared
galaxies. Within our sample, we conclude that eta has no dependence on the mass
of the host (parameterized by host galaxy kinematics and absolute R- and
K'-band magnitudes). We also attempt to estimate the average escape fraction
= Sum(dM/dt_esc^i) / Sum(dM/dt_tot^i) and ``ejection efficiency''
= Sum(dM/dt_esc^i) / Sum(SFR^i) for our sample, which we find to be
\~0.4-0.5 and ~0.1, respectively. The complex absorption-line properties of Mrk
231, an ultraluminous infrared galaxy which is optically classified as a
Seyfert 1, are discussed separately in an appendix.Comment: 34 pages, 12 .ps figures, 10 tables; accepted for publication in ApJ,
10 May 2002, v570 n
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